Tuesday, 31 December 2013

It's very satisfying to see the steep climb in visits to my website following the Timeshift Ladybird Books documentary last week.

The programme led me to review my website and to realise how horribly neglected it has been in recent months since I've been so focused on learning Chinese. So my new year's resolution list is headed by the determination to dust off and upgrade my Ladybird sites.

This will involve bringing my 'bookshop' into the 21st century, mending broken links, updating and adding to content.

I've made a start already. Somewhere along the line, all the data from my 'Ladybird posh frock' poll has disappeared. This is an important matter and such vital research must not be lost to the nation.

As a result, I've started again. But I need your data. Women of Britain (or elsewhere) please let me know your views (again?). Which Ladybird frock did it for you when you were a child? (Or maybe still does?)

Friday, 20 December 2013

Just back from the BBC studio in Luton where I was asked to contribute to Radio 4's Woman's Hour.

If was all very easy and straightforward - turn up, sound-check, answer a few questions, go home.

But it was something different, a bit of fun and all part of the long list of interesting activity that my Ladybird Book habit has let me into.

It was all in aid of publicising the Ladybird Book documentary on BBC4, this Sunday (22nd Dec) at 9.pm. The programme-makers for BBC4 seem to do so much as a labour of love - which can only be to the benefit of quality journalism.

Sunday, 15 December 2013

To
millions of people, Ladybird Books were as much a part of childhood as
battery powered torches and warm school
milk. These now iconic pocket sized books once informed us on such
diverse subjects as how magnets work, what to look for in winter and how
to make decorations out of old egg shells. But they also helped to
teach many of us to read via a unique literacy scheme
known as ‘Key Words’. Ladybird books were also a visual treat - some
of the best known contemporary illustrators were recruited to provide
images which today provide a perfect snapshot of the lost world of
Ladybirdland: a place that is forever the gloriously
ordinary, orderly1950s.

THE LADYBIRD BOOKS STORY: THE BUGS THAT GOT BRITAIN READING takes a look at the vintage years - from 1953 to 1973
- when millions of Ladybird books were sold and almost every household had some.